Lovčice (Bílé Podolí)

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Lovčice
Lovčice does not have a coat of arms
Lovčice (Bílé Podolí) (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Středočeský kraj
District : Kutná Hora
Municipality : Bílé Podolí
Area : 353.865 hectares
Geographic location : 49 ° 55 '  N , 15 ° 31'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 55 '26 "  N , 15 ° 30' 43"  E
Height: 260  m nm
Residents : 103 (March 1, 2001)
Postal code : 286 01
License plate : S.
traffic
Street: Podhořany u Ronova - Žleby
school
Memorial stone for the partisan brigade Mistr Jan Hus
Meierhof

Lovčice (German Lautschitz ) is a district of the minor town Bílé Podolí in Okres Kutná Hora in the Czech Republic . It is nine kilometers east of Čáslav .

geography

Lovčice is located in the basin of the Lovčický creek in the Čáslavská kotlina ( Czaslau basin ). One kilometer north of the village, the Silnice I / 17 runs between Čáslav and Heřmanův Městec . To the northeast rises the Višňovka ( Podhořaner mountain , 385 m nm), in the east the Homole (269 m nm).

Neighboring towns are Starkoč and Semtěš in the north, Podhořany u Ronova and Bílý Kámen in the northeast, Březinka , Licoměřice and Lipovec in the east, Chybka, Tuchov and Bousov in the southeast, Ronov nad Doubravou in the south, Vinaře in the southwest, Vinice and Dolní Bučice in the west as well Výčapy, Polsko, Zbyslav and Zaříčany in the northwest.

history

The first written mention of the village belonging to the Tupadly lordship was in 1352 when Václav von Smrdov assigned his property in Lovčice to his wife Kunka. The next owner was their son Beneš, who bequeathed Lovčice to his sister Markéta in 1464. Another part of the village was owned by Jan von Lovčice, he sold his share in 1466 to Burian Trčka von Lípa auf Lichtenburg . Until 1532 the town of Kuttenberg owned a small portion of Lovčice. From 1536 to 1554 Suda von Řenče owned the Lovčice estate. After 1600 Lovčice was attached to the Zbyslav Manor. At the end of the 17th century Maximilian von Thun and Hohenstein acquired the Zbyslav estate with the villages of Lovčice, Starkoč and Zaříčany and added it to his Fideikommiss rule Žehušice . In 1783 the 36-house village had 186 inhabitants. Over time the place was called Laucžicze or Loučitz .

In 1840 Lautschitz or Laučice consisted of 45 houses in which 317 people lived. In the village there was a large manorial farm with a sheep farm and a branch school. Parish was Zbislau .

After the abolition of patrimonial Loučice formed a municipality in the judicial district of Časlau . From 1868 the place belonged to the Časlau district . In 1900 the village had 436 inhabitants who lived in 61 houses. By order of the Linguistic Commission in Prague , the place name was changed to Lovčice in 1920 . In 1921, 429 people lived in the 71 houses in Lovčice. At the end of the Second World War, the first group of the Mistr Jan Hus partisan brigade formed in the Soviet Union was deposed on October 26, 1944 between Podhořany, Lovčice and Starkoč .

In the course of the territorial reform of 1960 the Okres Čáslav was repealed; Lovčice was assigned to the Okres Kutná Hora and in 1961 incorporated into Bílé Podolí. On March 3, 1991 the place had 101 inhabitants; in the 2001 census, there were 103 people in the 76 houses in Lovčice.

Local division

The Lovčice district forms a cadastral district. It has no connection with the rest of the municipality, with the Starkoč municipality in between.

Attractions

  • Memorial stone for the Mistr Jan Hus partisan brigade , north of the Meierhof at the junction of the road to Starkoč
  • baroque Meierhof, on the hill northeast of the village, it is in a ruinous condition
  • Starkoč cemetery with a chapel, northeast of the village on the border of the fields on the road to Podhořany u Ronova

Web links

Commons : Lovčice  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.uir.cz/katastralni-uzemi/604097/Lovcice
  2. ^ Johann Gottfried Sommer : The Kingdom of Bohemia; Represented statistically and topographically. Volume 11: Caslauer Kreis. Ehrlich, Prague 1843, p. 321 .
  3. https://www.czso.cz/documents/10180/20565661/13810901.pdf/3fde2441-c81b-4a1e-9b94-551e65007f70?version=1.0